Expand description
Utilities for interoperability with C++
See the project’s README for more information.
The API is not stable yet. Breaking changes may occur in new minor versions.
§Pointers
cpp_utils provides three kinds of pointers:
CppBox: owned, non-null (corresponds to C++ objects passed by value)PtrandMutPtr: possibly owned, possibly null (correspond to C++ pointers)RefandMutRef: not owned, non-null (correspond to C++ references)
Accessing objects through these pointers is inherently unsafe, as the compiler cannot make any guarantee about the validity of pointers to objects managed by C++ libraries.
Unlike Rust references, these pointers can be freely copied, producing multiple mutable pointers to the same object, which is usually necessary to do when working with C++ libraries.
Pointer types implement operator traits and delegate them to the corresponding C++ operators.
This means that you can use ptr1 + ptr2 to access the object’s operator+.
Pointer types implement Deref and DerefMut, allowing to call the object’s methods
directly. In addition, methods of the object’s first base class are also directly available
thanks to nested Deref implementations.
If the object provides an iterator interface through begin() and end() functions,
pointer types will implement IntoIterator, so you can iterate on them directly.
§Casts
The following traits provide access to casting between C++ class types:
StaticUpcastsafely converts from a derived class to a base class (backed by C++’sstatic_cast).DynamicCastperforms a checked conversion from a base class to a derived class (backed by C++’sdynamic_cast).StaticDowncastconverts from a base class to a derived class without a runtime check (also backed by C++’sstatic_cast).
Instead of using these traits directly, it’s more convenient to use static_upcast,
static_downcast, dynamic_cast helpers on pointer types.
The CastFrom and CastInto traits represent some of the implicit coercions
available in C++. For example, if a method accepts impl CastInto<Ptr<SomeClass>>,
you can pass a Ptr<SomeClass>, MutPtr<SomeClass>, &CppBox<SomeClass>,
or even Ptr<DerivedClass> (where DerivedClass inherits SomeClass). You can also
pass a null pointer object (NullPtr) if you don’t have a value
(Ptr::null() is also an option but it can cause type inference issues).
Modules§
Structs§
- CppBox
- An owning pointer to a C++ object.
- CppIterator
IteratorandDoubleEndedIteratorbacked by C++ iterators.- MutPtr
- A mutable pointer to a C++ object (similar to a C++ pointer).
- MutRef
- A non-null, mutable pointer to a C++ object (similar to a C++ reference).
- NullPtr
- A null pointer.
- Ptr
- A const pointer to a C++ object (similar to a C++ pointer).
- Ref
- A non-null, mutable pointer to a C++ object (similar to a C++ reference).
Traits§
- Cast
From - Performs some of the conversions that are available implicitly in C++.
- Cast
Into - Performs some of the conversions that are available implicitly in C++.
- CppDeletable
- Objects that can be deleted using C++’s
deleteoperator. - Dynamic
Cast - Converts a class pointer to a base class pointer.
- Static
Downcast - Converts a class pointer to a base class pointer without a runtime check.
- Static
Upcast - Converts a class pointer to a base class pointer.
Functions§
- cpp_
iter ⚠ - Constructs a Rust-style iterator from C++ iterators pointing to begin and end of the collection.